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History of Martinique

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Martinique was inhabited by Arawak and Carib peoples at the time Christopher Columbus came across the island in 1493. The island was not colonised by Europeans until 1635 when Pierre Belain d'Esnambuc landed with a hundred French settlers from Saint Kitts. They cleared forests to grow sugar cane, thus increasing tensions with the native Caribs, and in 1660 those Caribs who had survived the fighting were forcibly removed from the island in what has become known as the Carib Expulsion. In 1642, King Louis XIII authorised an action referred to as "La Traite des Noirs" that allowed for Blacks to be seized in Africa and forcibly brought to work as slaves in the French sugar plantations. The neffect of this meant thatr ensuing Martinican culture and its history has been the result of creolization between the French colonials and their African slaves.

Between 1794 and 1815, there was a strong British interest in Martinique, with control of the island changing several times within that period. Slavery was abolished under British rule, but reinstated after 1802, when the Treaty of Amiens gave Martinique back to France, and Napoléon Bonaparte allowed slavery again. Slavery was not officially abolished until 1848, with Victor Schoelcher’s law. All former slaves became French subjects.

Martinique's then capital, Saint-Pierre, which was widely considered to be the most cultured town in the West Indies, was destroyed in 1902, by a blast from the volcano Mont Pelée. All 28,000 inhabitants were killed with the exception of two (or possibly three) residents, and the town had to be completely rebuilt, although it lost both the status of capital, that title now belonging to Fort-de-France, and its cultural reputation.

In 1946, Martinique obtained the position of a French overseas department, due mainly to Aimé Césaire's campaign as mayor, and in 1974 it gained more autonomy with the regional status the island was allowed.

In 1635 a small contingency of French colonizers arrived on the island. They settled on the northwestern portion of the island, later to become known as St. Pierre. As their numbers grew, the French made their way across the island defeating the very aggressive Caribs. About eight years after settling the island the last of the Caribs were massacred in the area now known as Fort-de-France. Fort-de-France would soon become a major port as Martinique was the first stop for ships following the trade winds from Europe.

After their takeover of the island, the French began importing slaves and sugarcane. They had also taken their hand to tobacco, but tobacco, being a weed, would grow anywhere and soon Virginia took over the tobacco industry. With all the productivity on the island, the French soon caught the eye of the British near the end of the 1700s. As a result of this interest a power struggle began for the island between the British and French that would last almost two centuries. Martinique changed hands between the two powerhouses several times, including one incident during the French Revolution. Another delay in the end of slavery on the island came when Emperor Napoleon I married the daughter of a local plantation owner, Josephine Beauharnais – it was rumored slavery remained the mainstay of plantation owners as a favor to his in laws. The white planters on the island frightened by both the Jacobin reign of terror and a massacre on Saint Domingue representatives willfully placed the island under British rule. The tug of war finally ended in 1815, when the island was returned to France by England on orders from the Vienna Treaty.

The return of Martinique to France was bittersweet, as the endorsement of slavery continued well after the practice ended on neighboring islands around 1833. Revolution by French abolitionists in 1848 finally brought slavery to an end. Victor Schoelcher was appointed to head the committee on emancipation.

Mount Pelee started the twentieth century with a bang. On May 8, 1902, the volcano on the northern portion of the island erupted. The eruption included a pyroclastic flow, a "glowing cloud" that was a mixture of superheated air and dust moving at avalanche speed, which destroyed the town of St. Pierre and killed almost all the inhabitants (29,000 people). There was one survivor, a prisoner who was locked in the jail dungeon and saved because there was only a tiny window through which he could obtain air.

The remainder of the century was marked by social unrest by factions trying to gain independence from France. Several of these occasions turned violent. As a result Martinique, received greater overseas department status and powers in 1982-1983. By taking the power and distributing it more equally between local councils and leaders rather than all power lying with the prefects. Things have settled down quite a bit in the country now. Although some sugarcane is still produced the majority of the economy is based on tourism, with many French citizens coming for holiday and cruise ships docking on almost a daily basis, the island has flourished.

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